Edmonton Indigenous art park poised to open on Queen Elizabeth Park Road - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 01:55 AM | Calgary | -0.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
EdmontonVideo

Edmonton Indigenous art park poised to open on Queen Elizabeth Park Road

An indigenous art park opens next week on the south bank of the North Saskatchewan River.

(NW) River Lot 11 is 'going to be an eye opener I think for a lot of people from all cultures'

Artist Tiffany Shaw-Collinge stands in front of her work, Pehonan, at (NW) River Lot 11. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)

Tiffany Shaw-Collingeconsidersher first permanent piece of public art, Pehonan.

"It's an amphitheatre but it's also got a sacred circle at itsbase too, so it's kind got a bit of both worlds," she explains.

The work features four tiers of seatingmade fromdifferent materials, each used by generations of Indigenous people fromprehistoric times to the present.

'A really magical experience'

6 years ago
Duration 2:40
Take a tour of Edmonton's new Indigenous Art Park, (NW) River Lot 11.

"I felt I wanted to honour that and make an intentional point of finding ways for people to continue gathering on this place."

The place is (NW) River Lot 11, an art park on the site of the old Queen Elizabeth Park swimming pool.

The park showcases the work of Indigenous artists and their "deep connection in history to this area we all call home,"Shaw-Collingesaid.

Shaw-Collinge is one of six artists from Alberta, British Columbia and Ontario who have works featured in the park, whichopens to the public on Sept. 15.

The name is pronouncedEE-nuRiver Lot 11.

(NW) means "I am of the Earth," an ode to the ancestral lands of the Cree, while River Lot 11 is a nod to Joseph McDonald, aMtissettler who once lived on the site.

The park is a collaboration between Treaty 6 First Nations,MtisNation of Alberta, Edmonton Arts Council and the City of Edmonton and part of a larger $5.3-million revitalization of the area, according to Martina Gardiner, the city's director of open space delivery.

"There's a beautiful new shelter, a commemorative wall that acknowledges the Queen Elizabeth Outdoor Pool. We've got new walking trails which connect the upper and lower of Saskatchewan Drive," said Gardiner.

Shaw-Collinge was awarded hercommission just days after giving birth to her son Jasper, who accompanied her on her research outings and scouting missions for materials.

Jasper Collinge, 2, has grown up while his mother Tiffany researched and assembled her artwork. (Tiffany Shaw-Collinge)

"It was a really magical experience for me to just bring life into this whole conversation as I was looking at the deep past with my family."

Jasper is now 2 years oldand Shaw-Collinge can't wait to see him scampering up the grass onher creation.

A little farther away, another work calledTurtle was madewith children in mind.

"They're made for kid height, so a kid can sit down on it real comfortably and even walk on the edges or on top of it where we did mosaic tile," saidartist Jerry Whitehead.

"They're solid concrete, there's rebar inside. One weighs 11,000 pounds, the baby one, and the mother one weighs 16,000. They're not going anywhere."

The work is a departure for the Vancouver-based painter the first time in his 40-year career he applied for a commission for athree-dimensional work but he wanted to be a part of the"modern-day gathering place."

Working alongside students from Edmonton'sAmiskwaciyAcademy to bring the colourful turtles to life, Whitehead incorporated ideas and designs from conversations with local elders.

"It's going to be an eye opener I think for a lot of people from all cultures," Whitehead said.

A mosaic of a beaver on new artwork by Jerry Whitehead is showcased in (NW) River Lot 11. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)

That's what David Turnbullis hopingashe inspects the park a few days before the grand opening.

"We would love to see this space active," said Turnbull, the director of public artfor the Edmonton Arts Council.

"We want it to be a marker. We want it to really ring true, the importance of this site and the history of the people of this site. This was a traditional gathering space for thousands and thousands of years."

You can see more from (NW) River Lot 11 on this week's Our Edmonton Saturday at 10 a.m., Sunday and Monday at 11 a.m. on CBC TV.
David Turnbull, director of public art and conservation for the Edmonton Arts Council, checking in on the progress at (NW) River Lot 11. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)